Hi! I'm Kristin and I'm new to Air Forums thanks to the new addition to our family as of this past Saturday. My husband Jason and I have a (borderline unhealthy) addiction to rescuing both animals and cool old things that need some love and restoration. We have four rescued dogs who are our children, and are nearing the end of our first year of marriage and the simultaneous near-completion of a year-long renovation of our 1920 craftsman home in Knoxville, Tennessee.

Being that our marriage has not only survived but thrived during our various insane home improvement projects (a complete bathroom gut job, complete kitchen gut, plumbing and electrical hell, stripping 100 years of paint from woodwork, stripping and refinishing 100 year old pine floors) we took the plunge this past weekend into Airstream ownership after finding one that seems to suit us perfectly on Craigslist. Enter our 1965 26' Overlander International.

The sellers were a camping enthusiast couple who bought it three years ago to restore but just had too many other projects going on. Despite having already carefully gutted most of it, they decided to pass her on to someone with more time. We "adopted" her for a reasonable $3500 and were given not only the original paperwork for the trailer (title, owner's manual, warranty certificate, appliance manuals, and handwritten notes and "tips" from past owners) but all the cabinets and parts that had been removed came home with us too.

She's going to need a total gut and refurbish, but we're cautiously optimistic about the frame and shell condition and reusing many of the cabinets as well as the bath tub. She has a rotted subfloor right inside the door from a gasket that looks like it hasn't been replaced since '65, but thankfully very little was ever modified in this trailer. No new paint, flooring, or appliances that we can tell. Everything looks to be original - including the axles and wheels, unfortunately. A few dents to the front end, missing light lenses, a broken window, some scratches and rusty tongue/steps/bumper, and a badly peeling clearcoat that will need to come off, but we're planning to polish her someday anyway.

We've been scouring the forums obsessively trying to fill in any gaps in our DIY knowledge when it comes to the differences between renovating houses and travel trailers, and we can't wait to get started this weekend removing the rest of the interior fixtures and ripping up floor and wall liner. Any tips are much appreciated! We are in awe of how detailed some of the restoration threads here are and really appreciate the wisdom of all the experienced Airstreamers here. We'll try to post pictures as we go and may cry out for some help now and then, but we're hoping it will be a hugely rewarding experience just as our home renovation has been.

Thanks for reading, and here goes nothing! Also, we're going to be buying all new appliances and mostly new fixtures, so if anyone needs parts for their trailer please message me and we can try to help!

Thanks for the encouragement, Deb! I'm told often that I take too many pictures, so everyone here should have plenty to see! Where abouts in Ohio are you? I spent most of my years in the Cleveland area and just moved to Tennessee about 4 years ago.

Haha, Collapso. Yep, we are complete suckers for abandoned dogs and now Airstreams in need of adoption. Our house was a charity case too..it had been empty for two years and was in need of some serious TLC. Our ultimate dream is to full-time in the Airstream with our dogs someday.

ummm, well you ARE crazy... But you're in good company here. Your baby looks a lot like ours not so long ago. We love pics so don't worry about posting too many (not possible here!). Welcome to the family!

You are not crazy. Looks like you found a very good 65 to redo. The shell and windows appear to be in real good shape. The rest is just par for the course. Having restored an older home, I would not expect you to be unaware of what you will be getting into.

The folks on the forum are great. Welcome- you are now one of us. Your life will be forever changed- for the better.

I have a 66 and love it. Your bathroom looks just like mine. My toilet is not working so well, and I am planning on replacing it with a composting type since I only have a black water tank- that will now become my gray water tank. I have switched all interior overhead lights to LED. My fixtures look similar to yours. You may look at the thread "to LED or not to LED, posts 37-40 for details and photos.

Anyhow, glad to have you with us and join us in learning, having fun and camping.

Great find! Welcome to the forums and the "world" of Airstreams! Glad to have you join up on the forum, it is a great place to ask questions and get lots of good suggestions! As you disassemble parts to repair or replace, take a zillion + 1 photos.... you will need them numerous times as you put things back in order, or look to see where something was or where it was originally hooked up!

Have a good time!

__________________Mrs. NorCal Bambi traveling in S Tardis ~ from the Great State of Jefferson!

Thank you all so much for your kind words and support! We're hoping to preserve a lot of the trailer's history by keeping the cabinets mostly intact, but bring her up to the current decade (and make her greener) with LEDs and electrical and plumbing improvements. Will definitely check out that LED thread for guidance. We want to do a composting toilet as well, and use the black water tank as a gray.

Our Airstream can only get better from here!

__________________
Kristin
Previously owned a 1965 Overlander, fully renovated it, then sold it after a year of full-time travel. We're taking a break from trailers to try a class A for a while, but we're still Airstreamers at heart! Our blog | Video tour of our trailer

Well, our first project on our trailer wasn't without its hiccups, but past projects on our old house had us well prepared for the unexpected on our Airstream.

Our tongue and sway bars were horribly rusty and the old electric tongue jack inoperable. We set out to take everything apart, grind off rust, clean it all, and apply rust inhibitor.

Every nut, screw and chain was rusted into place of course. We used about a half a can of WD-40 and almost broke a couple sockets, but managed to get it all apart. We ground down the rust on all the flat pieces and will be soaking all the smaller bits in rust remover. The aluminum propane tanks are safely stored in our garage out of sight of any scrap-happy thieves.

After a good cleaning we painted the tongue with black Rustoleum (we don't have any POR-15 yet and it'll be a while yet until we're ready to paint the trailer frame, but when the time comes that's what we plan to use). Our truck is black, so we figured it would look fine and be easier to maintain than the old silver color since she'll be sitting uncovered outside. We'll polish the aluminum tanks someday and it should provide a really nice contrast, especially with the chrome bumpers on our Silverado. Oh, I also forgot to mention that we have the original brass fire extinguisher to mount on the front! Can't wait to clean that up and see if it still works.

All was going well enough until we bought a new tongue jack at Camping World. We measured the upper hole in the trailer tongue, but didn't realize the lower would be a smaller diameter. The tongue jack we purchased fit the top but not the bottom hole. We didn't really want to grind the lower hole any larger, so we're going to look around locally for another one. We thought maybe Tractor Supply or another RV store would have something that fits. Worst case we can always grind the lower hole.

For now our trailer is living the hillbilly life, resting on wood blocks and automotive jack stands. Any suggestions for a tongue jack are welcome. We want a manual crank rather than another electric. We work out regularly and actually like the exercise! I believe the bottom hole is 2" but for some reason online RV stores don't like to give a jack's diameter in their product specs.

This weekend we finish taking out the bathroom fixtures and remaining cabinets, then start in on wall and subfloor removal. I'm really dreading drilling out all those rivets and figuring out how the tub/sink/toilet is hooked together. Any and all tips are appreciated!